● 11.14.08

● Links 14/11/2008: ARM-powered GNU/Linux is Near

Posted in News Roundup at 7:28 am by Dr. Roy SchestowitzGNU/LinuxLinux boot sequence visualizedAn Introduction To OSCObama Won the Web Uptime Race, Too [with GNU/Linux]Help Spread Linux… Don’t Preach It!Long story short, the lesson seems to be that waving something in someone’s face is more likely to come off as rude and nagging, instead of capturing their interest as you hope to do. While trying to spread the perks of Linuxis a totally legitimate and an encouraged pursuit, one can’t expect to have too much luck with it by decking passers-by in the street with LiveCDs and harassing colleagues with stories of how perfect Linux is and pouncing to point out Vista’s flaws every time they encounter UAC asking for their permission to do something.Fedora 10 Preview ReviewOverall I believe that it is a great upgrade over the last Fedora which I had on my laptop for all of 5 hours as it was not as great as all the people said it was. I will continue to use Ubuntu and I may try out some more distros to see how great they are.5 Reason Why I am Using Ubuntu LinuxThe Bias Of A Windows User That Prefers LinuxDebian Lenny blinks its peepersDebian Installer lenny release candidate 1DevicesEthernet connector contains Linux serverLinux barcode scanner uses OLED displayAn Estonian embedded design house has developed a data-collection barcode scanner and PDA with an OLED display. Billed as the first OLED-equipped mobile terminal device, Artec’s Triskan TS8 Professional Mobile Terminal runs embedded Linux on an ARM processor, and includes Bluetooth and GSM/GPRS, with optional WiFi.Java and Linux on the Android – Almost the Perfect Match?Find your way with tangoGPSSub-notebooksSuper Small Laptop From KoreaOLPCComputer Per Child • Govt’s Initiative To Boost ICT Skills In Public SchoolsOLPC and Windows2. The reason these 10,000 systems had to be customized? Simple: Windows can’t even boot on open firmware. Can’t even boot! Which means that the other 990,000 XO (or so) systems in the wild CANNOT EVEN RUN WINDOWS with the firmware installed on them.ARMUbuntu on a Chip: ARMv7 Devices to Get Full Ubuntu DesktopsARM and Canonical to Bring Full Ubuntu Desktop Experience to Low-Power, ARM Technology-Based Computing DevicesUbuntu to run on ARMKDE4KDE4 apps: DolphinDolphin is the default file manager for KDE4. It is very powerful, offering many functionalities. The developers have focused on the functionality of Dolphin – being a file manager. As a long-time user, I can say it is a very proud substitute for its older brother, Konqueror (the default file manager for KDE3).Plasma: I’m backPlasma is, among other things, the new way of building your desktop, it works using Plasmoids, those Plasmoids are similar to Gadgets or Widgets. Plasmoids are contained by… well… containments, this relantionship it’s the secret of its flexibility. The Desktop (image background) is a containment, you can put as many plasmoids as you want, those can create a normal interface showing your /desktop files, or you can put clocks, stocks viewers, media controls, pictures, etc. However, the panel is a cointenment too, you can place your Plasmoids in your desktop or in the panel, Plasmoids will change their layout to match correctly their new containment.Kdenlive 0.7, for KDE 4‘Cloud’Opinion: Why GNU/Linux will ultimately succeedWhen I upgraded this week from Ubuntu 8.04 to 8.10, I had a remarkably short list of applications to install. I realised that I am using more and more applications “in the cloud” and fewer and fewer “on the Desktop”.“Cloud computing” has been around for a while now, but just in case you haven’t encountered it yet, it is the concept of using your web browser as a front end for an online application, whilst configurations and your data are stored on the providers server. Some people may refer to it as “software as a service” or a variety of other names.Linux, Microsoft, Mac: Meet your real competitorWhy clouds should be more like operating systemsPortsEVE Online coming to retail stores in MarchTasktop 1.3: Support Added for Firefox and LinuxLinux Desktop Migration Tips Keep On TickingTrainingLearn Ubuntu with Hackett and BankwellTest Driving Linux With Holonyx And Emprise™ 5000F/OSSPortrait: FOSS legal leader Andrew UpdegroveSchoolTool issues beta, 1.0 in AprilOpen source management vendor takes on the cloudMuleSource Upgrades Open Source ESB for Enterprise SOANew open source Ingres database coming Nov 18thSonatype forges ahead with Maven toolsZenoss Adds Native VMware Management, Extends Platform for Enterprises and Cloud Services ProvidersOpen Source Apps Go Live with One-Click Deployment to Morph AppSpaceRapidMind Opts for Open Source and Standards ProjectsFinanceNuclear winter for tech startups? Not if you’re open sourceOpen Source in a Down Economy: The Money Race Is OnGiving it Away for FreeAsiaOpen Source ERM and CRM Gain MomentumFreedom Walk – Final day at TrivandrumRegistration for FSFS Conference is open now [Kerala]Perl, Outsourcing and ChinaLeftoversInternet filter to block 10,000-plus “unwanted” sitesREADERS of The Courier-Mail online have blasted plans for Australia’s mandatory internet filter to block as many as 10,000 websites.The websites form a blacklist of unspecified “unwanted content”, Broadband Minister Stephen Conroy revealed in Federal Parliament.A copyright call to armsIn the era of peer-to-peer file sharing, on-demand television and easy copying of video games and movies, Canadians often take for granted the availability and ease of using digital media. It’s hard not to: the sheer amount of digital content available online is astonishing. For many, the Web is a black box that provides us with what we want, when we want it.But with a new session of parliament a week away, a host of proposed changes to copyright legislation threaten to tip the legal balance further in favour of those who sell and disseminate cultural content, rather than everyone who consumes it.Bruce Schneier: Securing Your PC and Your PrivacyAMDNvidia loses market share to AMDAMD Unveils a Server Chip Called ShanghaiDigital Tipping Point: Clip of the DayVictor Stone talks about music, Free Software, Creative Commons and life at Microsoft 01 (2004)Digital Tipping Point is a Free software-like project where the raw videos are code. You can assist by participating. Share in other sites/networks: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. Permalink  Send this to a friend

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